Reported US-Iran peace deal reduces Canadian mortgage rate hike threat

  6/16/2026 |   SHARE
Posted in Canadian Economy and Interest Rates by Vanguard Realty | Back to Main Blog Page

Data Reporting

A ceasefire between the United States and Iran is sending oil prices lower — and that has direct implications for Canadian mortgage borrowers.

TD Economics released an analysis on June 15, 2026, authored by economist Marc Ercolao. It outlines the terms of the framework deal and what the oil price response could mean going forward.

Oil prices have been a central driver of Canadian inflation throughout the conflict. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25 per cent in April, citing war in Iran as a force pushing oil prices higher and rekindling inflation fears. CMP’s coverage of how the oil shock shaped the Bank of Canada’s rate deliberations provides useful background.

What mortgage consumers and mortgage brokers should watch as the deal unfolds

The peace deal arrives ahead of the Bank of Canada’s next rate decision on July 15. This changes the inflation picture, at least at the margins.

The Bank held its overnight rate at 2.25 per cent for the fifth consecutive time on June 10, with a streak that began in December 2025. At his press conference, governor Tiff Macklem warned that if energy-driven inflation becomes entrenched, “there may be a need for consecutive increases in the policy rate.”

A fall in oil prices reduces that risk. But TD Economics’ caution about implementation means the Bank is unlikely to treat the deal as a turning point until supply data confirms the Strait is genuinely reopening.

Brokers advising clients on rate timing should monitor two signals:

  • whether tanker flows through Hormuz resume in the coming weeks, and
  • whether the June inflation print shows any easing in energy prices

For clients facing renewal decisions in this environment, CMP’s breakdown of what higher mortgage rates mean for Canadians renewing in 2026 covers the numbers in detail.

The full TD Economics analysis is available on the TD Economics website.

Source: Canadian Mortgage Professional



Canadian Mortgage Market, Fixed Rate Mortgages, Mortgage Consumers, Mortgage Rate Forecast, Mortgage Trends, Variable Rate Mortgages



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